Essay by Mary Oliver “CUTE”
Before Reading
A Few Words
Essay by Mary Oliver
Is "CUTE" a
compliment?
RI 4 Analyze the impact of specific word choices on meaning and tone. RI 10 Read and comprehend literary nonfiction. L 4a Use context as a clue to the meaning of a word.
Before you answer, think about it: What does cute really mean? Can you be cute and still be taken seriously? still be strong? still be respected? In this essay, Mary Oliver has a few words to say about what happens when we label something cute.
DEBATE With a group of classmates, jot down what comes to mind when you think of something cute. Would you want to be described this way? Form two teams and square off to settle the question of whether or not cute is a compliment.
860
text analysis: tone
A writer's tone, or attitude toward a subject, can subtly sneak up on you as you read or boldly hit you over the head in the first paragraph. By noticing a writer's choice of words and details, you can detect and analyze his or her tone. Mary Oliver begins this essay by declaring, "Nothing in the forest is charming." Her blunt statement immediately challenges a common perception of the forest and establishes her tone. As you read "A Few Words," note striking words, details, and images that Oliver uses, and consider the tone they convey.
reading skill: paraphrase
To understand difficult passages or sentences, it is sometimes helpful to paraphrase, or restate the writer's ideas in your own words. When you paraphrase, be sure to
? restate both the main idea and any important details ? use your own words, which may be simpler than those in the
original text
As you read, paraphrase this essay's difficult passages in a chart like the one shown.
Passage
"Gardens are charming, and manmade grottos, and there is a tranquility about some scenes of husbandry and agriculture that is charming--orderly rows of vegetation, or lazy herds, or the stalks of harvest lashed and leaning together." (lines 1?4)
My Paraphrase
Man-made elements of nature, like gardens and grottos, are pleasant. Some farm scenes, like orderly rows of crops, tame animals, and harvested produce, look peaceful and calm.
vocabulary in context
Mary Oliver uses these words to make her case about the perils of cuteness. To see how many you already know, choose the word that makes sense in each phrase.
word list deftness
diminutive
stalk valorous
1. a 2. the 3. a
4.
of wheat standing tall in the field of a quarterback eluding tacklers
teddy bear among larger toys action in the face of danger
Complete the activities in your Reader/Writer Notebook.
Meet the Author
Mary Oliver
born 1935 A Natural Writer Mary Oliver has been mesmerized by the natural world ever since she was a child growing up in Ohio. She has also always been enthralled by poetry. "I decided very early that I wanted to write," she says. "It was the most exciting thing, the most powerful thing, the most wonderful thing to do with my life." So she did it. Many years and countless awards later, Oliver still loves writing. "I feel writing is work, and I feel it's also play--bound together," she explains. Perfecting a Gift Oliver has been described as an "indefatigable guide to the natural world." An ardent observer of nature, she writes about the mysteries and wisdom that it reveals to us. For inspiration, she takes solitary walks in the fields and woods, which she calls part of her writing process. "Walks work for me," she explains. Critics and readers agree with her: Oliver is the winner of numerous awards, including the Pulitzer Prize and a National Book Award. Despite her success, Oliver confesses, "I never have felt yet that I've done it right. This is the marvelous thing about language. It can always be done better."
Authors Online
Go to . KEYWORD: HML9-861
861
A Few Words Mary Oliver
Nothing in the forest is charming. Gardens are charming, and man-made grottos,1 and there is a tranquility about some scenes of husbandry 2 and agriculture that is charming--orderly rows of vegetation, or lazy herds, or the stalks of harvest lashed and leaning together.
And nothing in the forest is cute. The dog fox is not cute, nor the little foxes. I watch them as they run up and down the dune. One is carrying the soiled wing of a gull; the others grab onto it and pull. They fly in and out of the blond grasses, their small teeth snapping. They are not adorable, or charming, or cute. 10 The owl is not cute. The milk snake is not cute, nor the spider in its web, nor the striped bass. Neither is the skunk cute, and its name is not "Flower." Nor is there a rabbit in the forest whose name is "Thumper," who is cute.
Toys are cute. But animals are not toys. Neither are trees, rivers, oceans, swamps, the Alps, the mockingbird singing all night in the bowers of thorn, the snapping turtle, or the purple-fleshed mushroom. a
Such words--"cute," "charming," "adorable"--miss the mark, for what is perceived of in this way is stripped of dignity, and authority. What is cute is entertainment, and replaceable. The words lead us and we follow: what is cute is diminutive, it is powerless, it is capturable, it is trainable, it is ours. It is all a 20 mistake. At our feet are the ferns--savage and resolute they rose, when the race of man was nowhere and altogether unlikely ever to be at all, in the terrifying shallows of the first unnamed and unnameable oceans. We find them pretty, delicate, and charming, and carry them home to our gardens.
Thus we manage to put ourselves in the masterly way--if nature is full of a hundred thousand things adorable and charming, diminutive and powerless, then who is in the position of power? We are! We are the parents, and the
stalk (st?k) n. a stem or main axis of a plant
L 4a
Language Coach
Denotation/Connotation A word's explicit, literal definition is its denotation. Reread lines 1?9. What are the denotations of adorable, charming, and cute?
a TONE
Reread lines 1?15. How would you describe Oliver's tone? Identify the words and images the author uses to create this tone.
diminutive (dG-mGnPyE-tGv) adj. very small
1. man-made grottos (grJtPIz): artificial caves created for coolness and pleasure. 2. husbandry (hOzPbEn-drC): farming.
862 unit 8: author's style and voice
governors. The notion facilitates a view of the world as playground and laboratory, which is a meager view surely. And it is disingenuous, for it seems so harmless, so responsible. But it is neither. b 30 For it makes impossible the other view of nature, which is of a realm both sacred and intricate, as well as powerful, of which we are no more than a single part. Nature, the total of all of us, is the wheel that drives our world; those who ride it willingly might yet catch a glimpse of a dazzling, even a spiritual restfulness, while those who are unwilling simply to hang on, who insist that the world must be piloted by man for his own benefit, will be dragged around and around all the same, gathering dust but no joy. c
Humans or tigers, tigers or tiger lilies--note their differences and still how alike they are! Don't we all, a few summers, stand here, and face the sea and, with whatever physical and intellectual deftness we can muster, improve our 40 state--and then, silently, fall back into the grass, death's green cloud? What is cute or charming as it rises, as it swoons? Life is Niagara, or nothing. I would not be the overlord of a single blade of grass, that I might be its sister. I put my face close to the lily, where it stands just above the grass, and give it a good greeting from the stem of my heart. We live, I am sure of this, in the same country, in the same household, and our burning comes from the same lamp. We are all wild, valorous, amazing. We are, none of us, cute.
b GRAMMAR AND STYLE
Reread lines 24?29. Notice how Oliver uses a variety of interrogative, exclamatory, and declarative sentences to express her views on human arrogance.
c PARAPHRASE
What is Oliver saying about human attitudes toward nature in lines 32?36? Paraphrase this sentence, breaking it down into several shorter sentences if necessary.
deftness (dDftPnGs) n. the quality of quickness and skillfulness
valorous (vBlPEr-Es) adj. brave
864 unit 8: author's style and voice
Compare your reaction to these photographs with your reaction to the one on page 863. In your opinion, do these photos illustrate Oliver's message better than the one on the preceding page? Explain your answer.
................
................
In order to avoid copyright disputes, this page is only a partial summary.
To fulfill the demand for quickly locating and searching documents.
It is intelligent file search solution for home and business.
Related download
- 1st grade poetry 11 12 humble independent school district
- mary oliver poetry writing assignment
- 2nd grade poetry humble independent school district
- helpful books for writing and reading poetry
- essay by mary oliver cute
- list of poetry essay questions from previous a p exams
- poetry lesson plans
- ap literature poetry essay prompts 1970 2016
- mseffie s list of poetry essay prompts for advanced